RRND Email Full Text (Scheduled)

  • IL: Charges dismissed after grand jury refuses to indict Laugh Factor manager for resisting gang thugs

    Source: Chicago Tribune

    “A federal judge on Wednesday ruled to formally dismiss the case against a Lakeview comedy club manager whom federal authorities had accused of slamming the door on the leg of a Border Patrol [gang member] during an October immigration arrest. Nathan Griffin, 25, was charged Oct. 27 with assaulting, interfering with or impeding a federal [gang member] after he allegedly shut a car door on a U.S. Customs and Border Protection [gang member] in a scuffle that followed an immigration enforcement [abduction] near the Laugh Factory, at the intersection of Belmont Avenue and Broadway. A grand jury ultimately refused to indict him.” (12/10/25)

    https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/10/charges-dismissed-comedy-club-manager-agent-assault/

  • Portugal: General Strike Stalls Transport, Closes Schools in Labour Reform Protest

    Source: US News & World Report

    “Train services ground to ‌a ​halt across Portugal on Thursday, hundreds ‌of flights were cancelled, and schools closed as unions launched a first general ​strike in more than a decade, in protest against proposed labour reforms. The minority centre-right government says the proposed changes – ‍amending more than 100 labour-code articles – ​aim to boost productivity and spur economic growth. But unions accuse it of tilting power toward employers ​at the ⁠expense of workers’ rights, despite a strong economy and low unemployment. The bill, yet to be submitted to parliament, is expected to pass with backing from the far-right Chega party. Some public transport operated due to minimum service requirements imposed by authorities, but Lisbon’s streets were noticeably quieter. While hospitals stayed open, most surgeries ‌and appointments have been postponed as nursing staff walked out.” (12/11/25)

    https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2025-12-11/portugal-general-strike-stalls-transport-closes-schools-in-labour-reform-protest

  • US FDA investigating possible adult deaths from COVID vaccines

    Source: San Diego Union-Tribune

    “The Food and Drug Administration is investigating whether COVID-19 vaccines caused deaths in adults, as part of a safety review that earlier appeared to just be focused on children. The investigation, being conducted across different divisions of the FDA, comes at a time when U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is upending longstanding guidance for a wide range of vaccines. The ‘FDA is doing a thorough investigation, across multiple age groups, of deaths potentially related to COVID vaccines,’ a spokesperson said in a statement to Bloomberg Tuesday.” (12/10/25)

    https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/2025/12/10/covid-possible-covid-vaccine-deaths/

  • Congo: Rwanda-backed M23 rebels say they’ve captured key city

    Source: The Guardian [UK]

    “Rwanda-backed M23 rebels claimed to have captured a key eastern city in Democratic Republic of the Congo as they continued their march to control more of Africa’s second largest country. In statements in English and French on Wednesday evening, a rebel spokesperson, Lawrence Kanyuka, claimed the city of Uvira had been ‘fully liberated, secured and under the control of the liberation forces.’ … The rebel sweep has already claimed other major eastern cities this year, including Goma and Bukavu, as analysts accuse Rwanda of wanting to annex Congolese territory for itself particularly because of the abundance of minerals such as coltan and gold.” (12/11/25)

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/dec/11/rwanda-backed-m23-rebels-say-captured-key-city-eastern-drc-uvira

  • Trump’s “gold card” program goes live, offering US visas starting at $1 million per person

    Source: Seattle Times

    “President Donald Trump announced Wednesday that his long-promised ‘gold card’ was officially going on sale, offering legal status and an eventual pathway to U.S. citizenship for individuals paying $1 million and corporations ponying up twice that per foreign-born employee. A website accepting applications went live as Trump revealed the start of the program while surrounded by business leaders in the White House’s Roosevelt Room. It is meant to replace EB-5 visas, which Congress created in 1990 to generate foreign investment and had been available to people who spend about $1 million on a company that employs at least 10 people. … The new program is actually a green card, effectively offering permanent legal residency with the chance for citizenship.” (12/10/25)

    https://archive.is/Nsezb

  • Mexico: Congress approves tariff hikes on imports from China and others

    Source: Associated Press

    “Mexico’s Congress approved Wednesday most of the tariff increases proposed by the government on more than 1,400 products imported from China and other countries that do not have free trade agreements with Mexico. … The governing Morena party of President Claudia Sheinbaum, who said the tariffs were necessary to spur domestic production, controls both chambers. … Analysts say the real motivation is ongoing negotiations with Washington, Mexico’s most important trading partner. Sheinbaum has been trying to find relief from remaining tariffs imposed on Mexican imports by the Trump administration, which has accused China of using Mexico as a backdoor into the U.S. market.” (12/10/25)

    https://apnews.com/article/mexico-china-tariffs-fa89b687e6fc61996b67083b3f789243

  • NASA loses contact with its Maven spacecraft orbiting Mars for the past decade

    Source: Orange County Register

    “NASA has lost contact with a spacecraft that has orbited Mars for more than a decade. Maven abruptly stopped communicating to ground stations over the weekend. NASA said this week that it was working fine before it went behind the red planet. When it reappeared, there was only silence. Launched in 2013, Maven began studying the upper Martian atmosphere and its interaction with the solar wind once reaching the red planet the following year. Scientists ended up blaming the sun for Mars losing most of its atmosphere to space over the eons, turning it from wet and warm to the dry and cold world it is today.
    Maven also has served as a communication relay for NASA’s two Mars rovers, Curiosity and Perseverance.” (12/10/25)

    https://archive.is/Be1vd

  • Myanmar: Dozens killed as regime forces launch air strike on hospital

    Source: Al Jazeera [Qatari state media]

    “At least 30 people, including patients, have been killed, and about 70 wounded after an air strike by the country’s military government hit a major hospital in western Myanmar, according to a rebel group, aid workers and a witness. Myanmar has been gripped by attritional fighting in a raging civil war. The hospital in western Rakhine state’s Mrauk U township was struck late on Wednesday by bombs dropped by a military aircraft, said Khine Thu Kha, a spokesman for the Arakan Army, which is battling the ruling government along parts of the coastal state.” (12/11/25)

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/12/11/dozens-killed-as-myanmar-military-govt-launches-air-strike-on-hospital?traffic_source=rss

  • US Suicide Rate Fell in 2024 After Hovering at High Level

    Source: US News & World Report

    “The U.S. suicide rate dropped slightly last year from some of the highest levels ever reported, preliminary data suggests. Experts say it’s hard to know exactly why, or whether the decline will continue. A little over 48,800 suicide deaths were reported in 2024, according to provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, roughly 500 fewer than the year before. The overall suicide rate fell to 13.7 per 100,000 people. Suicides rose for nearly two decades aside from a two-year drop around the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Then they shot up again, to more than 14 per 100,000 from 2021 to 2023.” (12/10/25)

    https://www.usnews.com/news/health-news/articles/2025-12-10/us-suicide-rate-fell-in-2024-after-hovering-at-high-level


  • The Attack on Somalis is Hate Politics

    Source: Unpopular Front
    by John Ganz

    “Ask yourself: If someone were actively trying to incite a pogrom against Minnesota’s Somali community, what would they do differently than Trump and his allies are doing now? And, if the government were controlled by David Duke, would it behave any differently? Don’t lie to yourself that this is just about the fraud investigation. That’s cover: A way to help the normies sleep at night. Trump is bashing the entire ethnic community, calling them ‘garbage,’ and menacing them as a group. It’s now combined with state repression: ICE agents have descended on Minneapolis. A U.S. citizen was ‘wrongfully’ detained by ICE agents for looking Somali. … Again, don’t lie to yourself: this wasn’t an accident. ‘Mistakes’ like this one do the dirty work. The point is to terrorize this community. To make them feel unwelcome. To say to them, ‘You’re not Americans, and you’ll never be.'” (12/11/25)

    https://www.unpopularfront.news/p/the-attack-on-somalis-is-hate-politics

  • The Trump Administration’s Policies Are Disrupting the Balkans

    Source: The American Conservative
    by Giorgio Cafiero

    “Siniša Karan’s victory in the November 23 snap presidential election for Republika Srpska, one of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s constituent polities, reinforces the enduring grip of the former President Milorad Dodik. Declaring that his opponents had merely ‘got two Dodiks’ this time, Dodik made clear that his influence remains undiminished. Dodik stepped down, following a court decision that required Dodik to pay a fine that spared him a prison sentence for actions undermining Bosnia and Herzegovina’s delicate order; yet the former president of Republika Srpska continues to loom large over the Bosnian-Serb entity’s political landscape despite being officially out of office. Karan’s win came less than a month after U.S. President Donald J. Trump suddenly and surprisingly lifted U.S. sanctions on Dodik, which had been in place since early 2017.” [editor’s note: Why should the US regime be sanctioning politicians in other countries in the first place? – TLK] (12/11/25)

    https://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-trump-administrations-policies-are-disrupting-the-balkans/

  • The Specter of Al Capone is Haunting Poland

    Source: Foundation for Economic Education
    by Andrzej Strojny

    “To American observers, Poland can appear to be an example of successful political transformation. A country that threw off the yoke of communism in 1989, shifted towards a market system, and this year ranked 20th among the world’s largest economies. However, more than 30 years after the fall of the Iron Curtain, the demons of state tyranny are reawakening on the Vistula River. This time, the threat to freedom does not come from Moscow, but from local town halls. In selected cities, bans on the sale of alcohol by shops at night are being introduced. Under the guise of health concerns, regulations are being introduced that, in fact, restrict consumer freedom and harm small businesses.” (12/11/25)

    https://fee.org/articles/the-specter-of-al-capone-is-haunting-poland/

  • So This Is What “America First” Looks Like

    Source: The Atlantic
    by Nancy A Youssef

    “Trump has said that his ‘America First’ approach to foreign policy includes employing transactional diplomacy to benefit the U.S., stopping other nations from ‘taking advantage’ of American support, and using force to defend the Western Hemisphere. But events in Somalia suggest that ‘America First’ often looks very different in practice, especially when it comes to the use of the military. Trump may have avoided sending large numbers of troops to war in operations oriented around nation-building. But he has aggressively intervened in conflicts around the world, typically with a torrent of expensive air strikes launched from out of harm’s way or with the deployment of small groups of Special Forces.” (12/11/25)

    https://archive.is/vniPh

  • The Knowledge Socialists (Still) Can’t Calculate

    Source: The Daily Economy
    by Art Carden

    “The ‘calculation problem’ is not a computational problem. It’s an epistemic problem. It isn’t that it was too hard to gather the necessary data and do the required calculations in 1920 (when Ludwig von Mises published ‘Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth’) or 1945 (when F.A. Hayek wrote ‘The Use of Knowledge in Society’) or 1985 (when Don Lavoie published Rivalry and Central Planning: The socialist calculation debate reconsidered). … The problem is that the data don’t exist unless the means of production are bought and sold in free markets – which means that modern technosocialists enamored with generative AI as the technology that will finally solve the calculation problem are missing the point.” (12/11/25)

    https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/the-knowledge-socialists-still-cant-calculate/

  • Think tanker altered Ukraine war map before big Polymarket payout

    Source: Responsible Statecraft
    by Nick Cleveland-Stout

    “On November 15, as Russian forces were advancing on the outskirts of the town of Myrnohrad in eastern Ukraine, retail investors placed risky bets in real time on the battle using Polymarket …. If Russia took the city by nightfall — an event that seemed exceedingly unlikely to most observers — a handful of retail investors stood to earn a profit of as much as 33,000% on the battle from the comfort of their homes. When nightfall came, these longshot gamblers miraculously won big, though not because Russia took the town (as of writing, Ukraine is still fighting for Myrnohrad). Instead, it was because of an apparent intervention by a staffer at the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a D.C.-based think tank that produces daily interactive maps of the conflict in Ukraine that Polymarket often relies on to determine the outcome of bets placed on the war.” (12/11/25)

    https://responsiblestatecraft.org/isw-polymarket-ukraine-war-map/

  • Glimmers of a Post-Trump World

    Source: CounterPunch
    by Dean Baker

    “Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JP Morgan, recently said that he was refusing to make a contribution to Trump’s ballroom monstrosity because he was concerned how a post-Trump Justice Department might view it. This comment should be taken very seriously. JP Morgan is by far the largest bank in the country, which Dimon has run for two decades. Also, Mr. Dimon is an astute businessman who clearly puts business above politics. Early in 2024 he gave Trump a pseudo-endorsement when he famously said that he thought the economy would do fine regardless of whether Trump or Biden won. That he is now thinking of a world with a normal Justice Department is huge. It’s not just Dimon who is thinking about a world beyond Trump. A near record number of Republican members of Congress have announced their retirement.” (12/11/25)

    https://www.counterpunch.org/2025/12/11/glimmers-of-a-post-trump-world/

  • Common Belief Versus Common Knowledge

    Source: Law & Liberty
    by John O McGinnis

    “On December 21, 1989, Romania’s communist dictator, Nicolae Ceaușescu, strode onto the balcony of the presidential palace to address an enormous crowd. Many in the square below had been bused in to show their support, and surrounding buildings had been draped with propaganda posters hailing his brilliant leadership. As soon as he began to speak, however, some of the crowd started to boo and hiss, and the murmurs of dissent swelled into a crescendo that drowned him out. His advisers urged him inside, and the regime cut off the national broadcast. It was too late. In that instant, the entire nation saw that multitudes of their compatriots hated him, just as they did themselves, though until then only in private. Within days, Romanians were in open revolt, and Ceaușescu was executed on Christmas Day. The demonstration created public knowledge of what had previously been widely held private knowledge.” (12/11/25)

    https://lawliberty.org/book-review/common-belief-versus-common-knowledge/

  • How the Next Big Thing in Carbon Removal Sunk Without a Trace

    Source: Wired
    by Alexandra Talty

    “With support from Microsoft, Stripe, and Shopify, Running Tide billed itself as on the cutting edge of carbon removal. In the end, it resorted to dumping thousands of tons of wood chips in the sea.” (12/11/25)

    https://archive.is/hjSEC

  • Impeach and Remove the Bastards

    Source: Liberal Currents
    by Adam Gurri

    “Let’s say the unlikely happens and Democrats take both houses in 2026. Surely that means nothing for removing people from office, right? You’ll never get two-thirds of the Senate no matter how big your majority. And if we get a majority at all, it is likely to be a slim one. No, that’s quitter talk. We can do this.” (12/11/25)

    https://www.liberalcurrents.com/impeach-and-remove-the-bastards/

  • Exploring The Chile Project

    source: EconLog
    by JP Bastos

    “Any book that intends to provide a complete account of a chapter covering almost 70 years in the history of ideas is an ambitious achievement by itself, especially when it is centered around a fuzzy concept like neoliberalism. If such a book also attempts to cover decades of economic history, discussing the evolution of policymaking and the intellectual and political debates that shaped it, one would probably worry that the author is trying to accomplish too much. Now, add that the author will try to do so while navigating murky waters, surrounded by the history of a violent dictatorship and the overall context of Latin American politics of the Cold War era. It seems like a recipe for failure. Yet, to the great benefit of his readers, Sebástian Edwards accomplishes all this brilliantly. The Chile Project: The Story of the Chicago Boys and the Downfall of Neoliberalism is nothing short of a monumental achievement.” (12/11/25)

    https://www.econlib.org/library/columns/y2025/bastoschileproject

  • Rose Wilder Lane, Frontier Prophet of Freedom

    Source: Libertarian Institute
    by Alan Mosley

    “On December 5, 1886, on a windswept homestead near De Smet in Dakota Territory, Rose Wilder Lane entered a world of adversity. She was the only surviving child of Laura Ingalls and Almanzo Wilder. Within a few short years her family’s cabin burned, her parents were stricken with diphtheria, her father suffered a crippling stroke, and severe winters forced them to leave the prairie. Those early calamities impressed on Lane two lessons that would define her life: that individual fortitude matters more than fate, and that no external authority can substitute for self‑discipline. … By age sixteen she was supporting herself as a Western Union operator, moving from town to town and reading voraciously after her night shifts. The hardships of her youth fostered a fierce independence that would blossom into a philosophy.” (12/11/25)

    https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/rose-wilder-lane-frontier-prophet-of-freedom

  • Trump’s Deportations Are Ripping Mothers from Their Babies

    Source: The Bulwark
    by Mona Charen

    “Again and again, Trump administration goons have insisted that they are deporting only the ‘worst of the worst … rapists, savages, monsters.’ They have even — and this is one of the most vile aspects of this government — encouraged their base to revel in the misery of their victims by releasing videos lovingly dwelling on images of people being bound and frog-marched toward the planes. The videos are titled ‘ASMR: Illegal Alien Deportation Flight.’ If their intended audience experienced a tingle of pleasure, they might want to fact check the administration’s claims. A Cato Institute report based on leaked ICE information showed that 73 percent of deportees had no criminal convictions and only 5 percent had a conviction for a violent crime.” (12/11/25)

    https://www.thebulwark.com/p/trumps-deportations-are-ripping-mothers-babies-venezuela-el-salvador-cecot-immigration

  • MAGA and the True Believer

    Source: The Jolly Libertarian
    by Marco den Ouden

    “Recently I published an overview of Eric Hoffer’s book, The True Believer. I had read the book twice before but only remembered the rough details of the book, namely that it as a study of the totalitarian mindset and the psychology of the people who are attracted to totalitarian mass movements. Given the current state of the world, the United States in particular, I wondered if MAGA was a mass movement. I also wondered about the divide in the libertarian/Objectivist world between Trump supporters and Trump opponents. Both sides observed the same facts, but each took an opposing view. Trump supporters see him as the Great Emancipator following in the footsteps of Abraham Lincoln. Trump opponents see him as a clear threat to liberty bent on imposing a dictatorship in the United States. If the facts are there, why the great divide? And why the fervor over the issue?” (12/10/25)

    https://jollylibertarian.blogspot.com/2025/12/maga-and-true-believer.html

  • US realizes it can seize boats after all

    Source: The Intercept
    by Nick Turse

    “After months of extrajudicial killings in the waters off Venezuela, the Trump administration opted instead to capture an oil tanker.” (12/10/25)

    https://theintercept.com/2025/12/10/united-states-seizes-oil-tanker-venezuela/

  • Why War Matters

    Source: Ludwig von Mises Institute
    by David Brady, Jr.

    “Today, some fans of our current administration will brow beat those with concerns over foreign policy and aid, accusing you of not being sufficiently focused on domestic issues. In a perfect world, one could stay focused on affordability (or immigration, as these brow beaters typically focus on) and other kitchen table issues. But the issue of war and peace touches every aspect of American life whether one wants to admit it or not. You should not allow gatekeepers, who selectively brow beat over foreign policy as a focus, to prevent you from caring about foreign policy.” (12/10/25)

    https://mises.org/mises-wire/why-war-matters

  • The DOJ Says It Will Challenge Unconstitutional Gun Policies. Maybe It Should Stop Defending Them.

    Source: Reason
    by Jacob Sullum

    “The Justice Department recently established a ‘Second Amendment Section’ within its Civil Rights Division. On its face, that move is a welcome development for defenders of the constitutional right to armed self-defense — an impression reinforced by the alarm the new initiative has generated among gun control advocates. But the section’s mission statement raises doubts about its commitment to Second Amendment advocacy. So does the Justice Department’s (DOJ) ongoing defense of constitutionally dubious federal gun laws.” (12/10/25)

    https://reason.com/2025/12/10/the-doj-says-it-will-challenge-unconstitutional-gun-policies-maybe-it-should-stop-defending-them/

  • The Best Big Media Merger Is No Merger at All

    Source: Electronic Frontier Foundation
    by Katharine Trendacosta

    “The state of streaming is… bad. It’s very bad. The first step in wanting to watch anything is a web search: ‘Where can I stream X?’ Then you have to scroll past an AI summary with no answers, and then scroll past the sponsored links. After that, you find out that the thing you want to watch was made by a studio that doesn’t exist anymore or doesn’t have a streaming service. So, even though you subscribe to more streaming services than you could actually name, you will have to buy a digital copy to watch. A copy that, despite paying for it specifically, you do not actually own and might vanish in a few years. … It’s important to recognize this as we see more and more media mergers. These mergers are not about quality, they’re about control.” (12/10/25)

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/12/best-big-media-merger-no-merger-all

  • Wicked Shows Us the Moral Strategies for Resisting a Regime Gone Bad

    Source: The UnPopulist
    by Eric K Ward

    “Every era has its witch. Every empire, its scapegoat. The person painted green so the rest of us can pretend we’re clean. That’s the real story of Wicked, the celebrated Broadway musical adapted into two feature films in 2024 and 2025 that are part origin narrative and part reinterpretation of L. Frank Baum’s 1900 children’s novel, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. … We are living through our own Emerald City moment. Propaganda repeats on loop; scapegoats fill the headlines; teachers are called indoctrinators; artists are called subversives; journalists are labeled enemies; officeholders from the opposition party are deemed America-haters. Entire communities are remixed into villains so authoritarians can stay in charge. Same playbook, new costumes.” (12/10/25)

    https://www.theunpopulist.net/p/wicked-shows-us-the-moral-strategies

  • Zero/Not-Zero

    Source: Common Sense
    by Paul Jacob

    “Forty-four million views later, the University of Oklahoma has advised student Samantha Fulnecky that the zero her paper received won’t be factored into her final course grade. While it’s good that the school won’t hold that zero against her, she deserves a grade — an honest, objective grade — for her work. Fulnecky did submit a paper, contrary to what is implied by the zero. She did indeed turn in an essay on the topic of ‘gender, peer relations and mental health’ that her class was assigned. Perhaps the word ‘gender’ has given you the clue. You guessed it: she took the wrong view.” (12/10/25)

    https://thisiscommonsense.org/2025/12/10/zero-not-zero/

  • The Tiny Car vs Big Government

    Source: Independent Institute
    by Allen Gindler

    “President Trump recently posted a declaration that confused me a bit. He wrote that he has approved ‘TINY CARS to be built in America,’ proclaiming that they will be inexpensive, safe, fuel-efficient, and amazing. He thanked the Department of Justice and the Departments of Transportation and Environment and demanded that manufacturers start building them now. It sounded like the leader of a centrally planned economy who personally decides which products are permitted. The tone was almost [sic] authoritarian, as if the market had been waiting for permission from the state to innovate. There is a saying: perception is reality. Trump wants us to believe that he is in charge of everything in the country and the world, from diverting hurricanes to stopping wars, regulating trade, and producing automobiles.” (12/10/25)

    https://www.independent.org/article/2025/12/10/approved-tiny-cars/

  • Webster Groves Should Not Institute an Economic Development Sales Tax

    Source: Show-Me Institute
    by David Stokes

    “There is a long list of really dumb taxes in Missouri. The St. Louis and Kansas City earnings taxes are actively harmful to growth and opportunity. The personal property taxes on livestock are absurd. The pool table tax has long been an anachronism. But I have always thought that the single worst tax is Missouri is the local economic development sales tax. Why is it the worst? Because while the other taxes are harmful, they at least fund, in part, necessary functions of government. The economic development sales tax is a tax that entirely funds actions that cities should not be engaged in. It’s a tax that collects more money from people to make our communities worse off.” (12/10/25)

    https://showmeinstitute.org/blog/special-taxing-districts/webster-groves-should-not-institute-an-economic-development-sales-tax/

  • Orange man bad. Really, really bad.

    Source: The Price of Liberty
    by Nathan Barton

    “The Donald is not (in our opinion) a particularly likeable person. He has significant personal faults, can be very irritating, and does not appear (to us) to be a strong advocate for liberty and freedom. He has compromised on many things. So we here at The Price of Liberty are no great fans of The Donald. He is boastful and arrogant, has many other character faults, and (like others who have held his office) he fails to understand the nature of human liberty and the proper role of human government. He has made a lot of mistakes, not just in his first term. But we recognize that while he is bad, relative to those people who were the alternatives? He is definitely the least of two evils. (We are talking Obama, Clinton, Biden, and especially Harris.)” [editor’s note: Sure, if by “definitely the least of,” one means “exactly like the others” – TLK] (12/10/25)

    https://thepriceofliberty.org/2025/12/10/orange-man-bad-really-really-bad/